STRATEGY

How to use data to make faster product decisions

MAY 21, 2025·PledgeOFF·8 min read·affiliate linksSTRATEGY

The frustration isn't having too little data.

Most product teams have too much data — dashboards with 40 charts, analytics platforms full of events nobody queries, weekly reports that get skimmed and archived.

The problem is that none of this data is organized around the questions that drive product decisions. It's organized around what was easy to track.

Data that doesn't answer specific questions is noise. Here's how to build the small, focused data infrastructure that makes product decisions fast and confident.

The three questions every product team needs answered fast

Question 1: Is our core value being delivered?

This is your north star metric. Not DAU or revenue — the specific action that indicates a user is getting the core value of your product.

For a project management tool: tasks marked complete per week. For a validation tool: analyses run per user per month. For a CRM: deals moved to next stage per week.

When this metric is healthy: you're delivering value. Build on that. When it's declining: something is wrong. Find out what before building anything new.

Question 2: Where are users failing?

Define your core user journey — the sequence of actions from signup to first value. For each step in the sequence, track the completion rate.

The step with the lowest completion rate is your highest-priority problem. Not the step that stakeholders talk about most. The step where data shows users stop. This is the same filtering logic used in how to prioritize features when everything feels urgent — data replaces stakeholder opinion.

This question should take 5 minutes to answer. If it takes 3 days of analytics work: your data infrastructure is wrong.

Question 3: What are your best users doing that others aren't?

Segment your users by retention. Take the top 20% (most active, longest retained). What do they do in their first week that churned users don't?

This is your activation pattern. Build your onboarding around replicating it. Reduce everything in the new user experience that doesn't lead toward that pattern.

Building the minimal data setup

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You don't need a data warehouse. You need 4 things:

1. Event tracking on the core actions

Instrument these events at minimum:

  • Signup
  • First core action completed
  • Core action repeated (day 7, day 30)
  • Upgrade
  • Cancellation

If you have these five events with timestamps, you can answer all three questions above.

Every event needs: user ID, timestamp, and relevant context (e.g., which plan, which feature).

2. A funnel view

The funnel from signup → first core action → repeated core action is the most important visualization you have. It shows exactly where users fall off.

Build this view so you can check it in 2 minutes, not 2 hours.

3. Cohort retention

Group users by signup week. For each cohort: what percentage are still active at week 4, week 8, week 12?

Improving this chart is the most direct path to a healthier business. Every product decision should be evaluated against: does this improve the cohort chart?

4. A single decision log

When you make a product decision, write down:

  • What changed
  • What metric you expected to move
  • What the metric actually did after 30 days

This log is the most valuable internal document a product team can have. It tells you which of your instincts were right and which were wrong — and it builds pattern recognition faster than any other practice. This is the antidote to the problem described in why intuition is killing your product — you're building a track record instead of relying on gut feel.

The anti-patterns that make data slow

Tracking everything without a question in mind. Events without questions produce reports nobody reads. Track what you need to answer your three core questions. Nothing else for now.

Waiting for statistical significance on every change. At early-stage scale, you'll rarely get statistical significance. Make decisions based on directional signal and speed up your next experiment. Waiting for significance on a cohort of 200 users will take months.

Using data to confirm, not to challenge. The most common misuse of data is cherry-picking the chart that supports the decision you already made. Decide what question you're asking first. Then look at the data. Accept what it says.

Building dashboards instead of answering questions. A dashboard with 40 charts is not a data practice. It's a way of feeling organized while avoiding the hard question of what matters. Delete 80% of your charts. Keep the 3 that answer your core questions.

The tools that make this practical

Mixpanel — the best tool for funnel analysis and cohort retention at early-stage scale. The event tracking setup takes a day. After that, answering "where are users dropping off?" takes minutes.

Hotjar — session recordings answer the qualitative version of the same question: not just where users stop, but why. When the funnel shows 40% drop-off at step 3, Hotjar shows you what those users are actually doing before they leave.

The decision velocity target

A team with good data infrastructure should be able to:

  • Answer "is our core value being delivered?" in 5 minutes
  • Answer "where are users failing?" in 10 minutes
  • Evaluate a feature's impact 30 days after shipping in 15 minutes

If any of these takes longer, the bottleneck is instrumentation — not analysis. Fix the tracking. The analysis follows automatically.

Fast decisions aren't reckless decisions. They're decisions made by teams who know what they're measuring and can see the signal clearly. The next step after setting up good data infrastructure is putting it to work on the hardest question: how to decide between pivoting and persisting.

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Affiliate disclosure: This article contains affiliate links marked with rel="nofollow sponsored". If you purchase through them, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend tools we've evaluated and believe in.

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